“…It is our view that solvent-less environments found in liquidassistedg rinding and/ora ging in moist air,a re more effective than conventional dilute solutions in replicating the natural environmento fm any enzymes.M uch more akin to low h conditions of liquid-assisted mechanochemistry,e nzymes secreted by microorganisms thrive on moist surfaces, and intracellular enzymes functioni nh ighly concentrated, organized environments.T his observation is consistent with the ongoing change in our understanding of chemical transformations, [161] with the growingr ealization that many reactions readily proceed in solvent-less mechanochemicale nvironments. [18,115,[162][163][164][165][166][167][168] Indeed, mechanochemistry,w hichw as recently proposed to be involved in the emergence of small organic molecules on the early Earth, [169] has successfully provided routes to chemical selectivity, [19,170,171] as well as reactions [172,173] or molecules [174][175][176] that have otherwiseb een considered difficult or even impractical to access. Although mechanoenzymatic reactivity is in a very early stage of development, it has already sparked as ignificanta mount of interest, [177] and provided simple solutions to streamline industrial processing of, for example, lignocellulosic material.…”